| If i could step in the thread for a moment:
Does the use of these opcodes "replace" linenr and other release-related opcodes ?
Is this THE proper (efficient) way to do that sort of thing ?
Thnx,
yair
Gabriel Maldonado wrote:
> Look at release/xtratim opcodes already implemented in public version (in particular the
> example):
>
> xtratim iextradur
> kflag release
>
> DESCRIPTION
> Extend the duration of realtime generated events and handle their extra life.
>
> INITIALIZATION
>
> iextradur - additional duration of current instrument instance
>
> PERFORMANCE
>
> xtratim exetends current MIDI-activated note duration of iextradur seconds
> after the corresponding note-off message has deactivated current note itself.
> This opcode has no output arguments.
> release outputs current note state. If current note is in the release stage
> (i.e. if its duration has been exetended with xtratim opcode and if it has
> only just deactivated), kflag output argument is set to 1, else (in sustain
> stage of current note) is set to 0.
>
> These two opcodes are useful for implementing complex release-oriented envelopes.
>
> Example:
> instr 1 ;allows complex ADSR envelope with MIDI events
> inum notnum
> icps cpsmidi
> iamp ampmidi 4000
> ;
> ;############## complex envelope section ##############
> xtratim 1 ;extra-time, i.e. release dur
> krel init 0
> krel release ;outputs release-stage flag (0 or 1 values)
> if (krel > .5) kgoto rel ;if in relase-stage goto relase section
> ;
> ;************ attack and sustain section ***********
> kmp1 linseg 0,.03,1,.05,1,.07,0,.08,.5,4,1,50,1
> kmp = kmp1*iamp
> kgoto done
> ;
> ;************ release section **********************
> rel:
> kmp2 linseg 1,.3,.2,.7,0
> kmp = kmp1*kmp2*iamp
> done:
> ;###################################################
> ;
> a1 oscili kmp, icps, 1
> out a1
> endin
>
> Aaron Isaksen wrote:
> >
> > I have asked Prof. Vercoe to add an opcode to extended csound that would
> > perform a conditional goto only at the release of a note. I'm planning on
> > using this for realtime with midi, where the length of a note is not known
> > (no p3).
> >
> > I don't think there is a way to do this using an if statement.
> >
> > If the community thinks this is a useful opcode, could someone add it to
> > the public csound distribution?
> >
> > Thank you,
> >
> > -Aaron Isaksen
>
> --
> Gabriel Maldonado
>
> http://www.agora.stm.it/G.Maldonado/home2.htm
Received: from stork.maths.bath.ac.uk by omphalos.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa11415;
6 Nov 98 14:09 GMT
Received: from mercury.bath.ac.uk by stork.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa11761;
6 Nov 98 14:09 GMT
Received: (qmail 23625 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 14:08:58 -0000
Received: from hermes.ex.ac.uk (HELO exeter.ac.uk) (144.173.6.14)
by mercury.bath.ac.uk with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 14:08:58 -0000
Received: from noether [144.173.8.10] by hermes via SMTP (OAA25983); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 14:02:37 GMT
Received: from exeter.ac.uk by maths.ex.ac.uk; Fri, 6 Nov 1998 14:02:23 GMT
Received: from sparticus.bright.net [205.212.123.14] by hermes via ESMTP (OAA14004); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 14:02:20 GMT
Received: from brutus (find-cas3-cs-12.dial.bright.net [209.143.26.217])
by sparticus.bright.net (8.9.1/8.9.1 ComNet Build) with SMTP id JAA27126;
Fri, 6 Nov 1998 09:02:01 -0500 (EST)
Message-ID: <36430468.4438F0BA@bright.net>
Date: Fri, 06 Nov 1998 09:15:04 -0500
From: Dave Phillips
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (X11; I; Linux 2.0.29 i486)
MIME-Version: 1.0
To: Csound Mail-list
CC: Csound Linux/Unix Development Group ,
Richard Boulanger
Subject: Linux Csound and Other Agendas
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Sender: owner-csound-outgoing@maths.ex.ac.uk
Precedence: bulk
Greetings:
I've just spent the last hour going over messages dating back to RCB's
first announcement of his planned book. I note that while a Csound
Developers Group was indeed formed, its email traffic eventually
dwindled and disappeared.
The real gist is that NOWHERE and at NO TIME was The Master Plan
spelled out in specifics (what EXACTLY is meant by "in step" or "in
sync" with versions for Windows, SGI and the Mac ?), and as a result I
continued to develop Csound for Linux in the manner which I found most
amenable. With help from Nicola Bernardini and many others I feel that
we have made a version of Csound which most fully exploits capabilities
inherent to Linux while remaining fully compatible with existing orc/sco
files.
Nevertheless, I feel that I owe John Fitch a public apology. Since I
was not FULLY informed as to the details of The Master Plan, I simply
kept placing my work on the Bath server and elsewheres, assuming (very
wrongly, which is why I am apologizing to him) that John could/would
look at my distributions if he wondered what I was doing. The Linux
Csound community didn't seem to mind, I received no horror stories of
incompatibilities, unless they had to do with the namespace pollution
introduced by the canonical sources.
And so: I will make every attempt to provide a base-line version of
Linux Csound, one which in no way differs from the canonical sources, if
that is what is desired. It will be the last time I do so, for I am far
more interested in advancing the capabilities of Csound for Linux. I
feel that is my original obligation, and it is obviously time for me to
step aside and let someone else provide the plain-vanilla version.
John, I'm sorry for causing you distress over all of this, it was
certainly not intended, and it is emphatically not a personal issue. I
will do anything I can to ensure that the version going out with RCB's
book will be to your liking. I am engaged in a complete re-write of my
chapter and I will spell out CLEARLY that there are multiple versions
available, just as they are available for other platforms (viz the
numerous versions for Windows). If you like, I will also specify that
versions I supply are developmental and that the Bath server can supply
the stable plain-vanilla package.
I make no apology for the wonderful efforts of the Linux Csound
developers group. To do so would insult the work of a great group of
programmers who have, as has jpff, dedicated so much of their time and
energies towards providing the best possible version of Csound currently
available for their chosen OS.
I am also not very interested in discussing this further, with anyone.
Once accord is reached on The Master Plan for the Csound Book it seems
to me that there will be no need for my involvement. If John and Richard
are happy with whatever version is eventually provided then I can more
quickly return to my preferred activities (as can we all). Polemics is
not one of those.
Thank you,
== Dave Phillips
http://www.bright.net/~dlphilp/index.html
http://www.bright.net/~dlphilp/linux_soundapps.html
Received: from stork.maths.bath.ac.uk by omphalos.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa11431;
6 Nov 98 14:21 GMT
Received: from pat.bath.ac.uk by stork.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa13045;
6 Nov 98 14:21 GMT
Received: (qmail 4401 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 14:20:57 -0000
Received: from intern12.lnk.telstra.net (HELO toad.ilogic.com.au) (majordomo@139.130.53.38)
by pat.bath.ac.uk with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 14:20:57 -0000
Received: (from majordomo@localhost)
by toad.ilogic.com.au (8.8.7/8.8.7) id BAA32213
for csound-unix-dev-list; Sat, 7 Nov 1998 01:02:34 +1100
X-Authentication-Warning: toad.ilogic.com.au: majordomo set sender to owner-csound-unix-dev@ilogic.com.au using -f
Received: from sparticus.bright.net (sparticus.bright.net [205.212.123.14])
by toad.ilogic.com.au (8.8.7/8.8.7) with ESMTP id BAA32208
for ; Sat, 7 Nov 1998 01:02:30 +1100
Received: from brutus (find-cas3-cs-12.dial.bright.net [209.143.26.217])
by sparticus.bright.net (8.9.1/8.9.1 ComNet Build) with SMTP id JAA27126;
Fri, 6 Nov 1998 09:02:01 -0500 (EST)
Message-ID: <36430468.4438F0BA@bright.net>
Date: Fri, 06 Nov 1998 09:15:04 -0500
From: Dave Phillips
X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (X11; I; Linux 2.0.29 i486)
MIME-Version: 1.0
To: Csound Mail-list
CC: Csound Linux/Unix Development Group ,
Richard Boulanger
Subject: [CUD] Linux Csound and Other Agendas
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Sender: owner-csound-unix-dev@ilogic.com.au
Precedence: bulk
Greetings:
I've just spent the last hour going over messages dating back to RCB's
first announcement of his planned book. I note that while a Csound
Developers Group was indeed formed, its email traffic eventually
dwindled and disappeared.
The real gist is that NOWHERE and at NO TIME was The Master Plan
spelled out in specifics (what EXACTLY is meant by "in step" or "in
sync" with versions for Windows, SGI and the Mac ?), and as a result I
continued to develop Csound for Linux in the manner which I found most
amenable. With help from Nicola Bernardini and many others I feel that
we have made a version of Csound which most fully exploits capabilities
inherent to Linux while remaining fully compatible with existing orc/sco
files.
Nevertheless, I feel that I owe John Fitch a public apology. Since I
was not FULLY informed as to the details of The Master Plan, I simply
kept placing my work on the Bath server and elsewheres, assuming (very
wrongly, which is why I am apologizing to him) that John could/would
look at my distributions if he wondered what I was doing. The Linux
Csound community didn't seem to mind, I received no horror stories of
incompatibilities, unless they had to do with the namespace pollution
introduced by the canonical sources.
And so: I will make every attempt to provide a base-line version of
Linux Csound, one which in no way differs from the canonical sources, if
that is what is desired. It will be the last time I do so, for I am far
more interested in advancing the capabilities of Csound for Linux. I
feel that is my original obligation, and it is obviously time for me to
step aside and let someone else provide the plain-vanilla version.
John, I'm sorry for causing you distress over all of this, it was
certainly not intended, and it is emphatically not a personal issue. I
will do anything I can to ensure that the version going out with RCB's
book will be to your liking. I am engaged in a complete re-write of my
chapter and I will spell out CLEARLY that there are multiple versions
available, just as they are available for other platforms (viz the
numerous versions for Windows). If you like, I will also specify that
versions I supply are developmental and that the Bath server can supply
the stable plain-vanilla package.
I make no apology for the wonderful efforts of the Linux Csound
developers group. To do so would insult the work of a great group of
programmers who have, as has jpff, dedicated so much of their time and
energies towards providing the best possible version of Csound currently
available for their chosen OS.
I am also not very interested in discussing this further, with anyone.
Once accord is reached on The Master Plan for the Csound Book it seems
to me that there will be no need for my involvement. If John and Richard
are happy with whatever version is eventually provided then I can more
quickly return to my preferred activities (as can we all). Polemics is
not one of those.
Thank you,
== Dave Phillips
http://www.bright.net/~dlphilp/index.html
http://www.bright.net/~dlphilp/linux_soundapps.html
Received: from stork.maths.bath.ac.uk by omphalos.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa11663;
6 Nov 98 15:40 GMT
Received: from pat.bath.ac.uk by stork.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa21540;
6 Nov 98 15:40 GMT
Received: (qmail 15253 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 15:40:47 -0000
Received: from intern12.lnk.telstra.net (HELO toad.ilogic.com.au) (majordomo@139.130.53.38)
by pat.bath.ac.uk with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 15:40:47 -0000
Received: (from majordomo@localhost)
by toad.ilogic.com.au (8.8.7/8.8.7) id CAA32395
for csound-unix-dev-list; Sat, 7 Nov 1998 02:22:28 +1100
X-Authentication-Warning: toad.ilogic.com.au: majordomo set sender to owner-csound-unix-dev@ilogic.com.au using -f
Received: from aleve.media.mit.edu (aleve.media.mit.edu [18.85.2.171])
by toad.ilogic.com.au (8.8.7/8.8.7) with ESMTP id CAA32390
for ; Sat, 7 Nov 1998 02:22:24 +1100
Received: from [153.35.177.202] (1Cust237.tnt1.new-bedford.ma.da.uu.net [153.35.177.237])
by aleve.media.mit.edu (8.8.7/ML970927) with ESMTP id KAA16422;
Fri, 6 Nov 1998 10:21:55 -0500 (EST)
Date: Fri, 6 Nov 1998 10:21:55 -0500 (EST)
Message-Id:
In-Reply-To: <36430468.4438F0BA@bright.net>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
To: Dave Phillips
From: Richard Boulanger
Subject: [CUD] Re: Linux Csound and Other Agendas
Cc: Csound Mail-list ,
Csound Linux/Unix Development Group
Sender: owner-csound-unix-dev@ilogic.com.au
Precedence: bulk
David,
I very much appreciate all of your efforts and this letter as well.
There has been no secret agenda or master plan... just a shared hope
between John ffitch and myself that we could converge all the public stuff
by the time that the book was released so that - for that one instant in
time - thousands of orchestras and scores would work exactly the same way
on the three main platforms - Mac, PC and Linux.
Over the summer, as the MIDI stuff began to come appart - little working on
the Mac, less working on ffitch's pc version, problems with the Linux
version, and a fantastic, but totally (Mac and PC) incompatabile version
from Gabriel - it began to look to me like there would never be a
convergence. My hope at that point was that most of the book would still
run. (In fact, at the last minute I pulled ALL the MIDI chapters from the
book - 5 chapters including the one by Mike Berry, Bill Alves, Scotty
Vercoe, Gabriel Maldonado and my own! Because I couldn't get the things
running on both the Mac and the PC.)
My plan is to now include them on the CD-ROM in hopes that we will have
some stability and common functionality by then.
The thing that I have sensed all along - and that worries me terribly, is
that everyone is competing out there to proove who has the BEST Csound
rather than collaborating to make available a uniform BETTER Csound. I
realize that this level of collaboration is incredibly difficult... if not
impossible really. But that is my dream. I have dedicated the best part
of the past 20 years to that end and have been grateful to all the
developers who have contributed to a better public software synthsisizer
which is free for all.
To you David... and Gabriel, Michael, Matt, Richard, John, Dave, Mike,
Ricardo, Nicola, Allesandro, Barry, Robin, Jean, Alexdre, Paris and all
those who have contributed to the development of Csound I am eternally
grateful. I hope and pray that we can all continue WORKING TOGETHER to
keep Csound alive, current, ever more powerful and full featured... and
most of all... compatible.
Sincerely,
Richard
>Greetings:
>
> I've just spent the last hour going over messages dating back to RCB's
>first announcement of his planned book. I note that while a Csound
>Developers Group was indeed formed, its email traffic eventually
>dwindled and disappeared.
>
> The real gist is that NOWHERE and at NO TIME was The Master Plan
>spelled out in specifics (what EXACTLY is meant by "in step" or "in
>sync" with versions for Windows, SGI and the Mac ?), and as a result I
>continued to develop Csound for Linux in the manner which I found most
>amenable. With help from Nicola Bernardini and many others I feel that
>we have made a version of Csound which most fully exploits capabilities
>inherent to Linux while remaining fully compatible with existing orc/sco
>files.
>
> Nevertheless, I feel that I owe John Fitch a public apology. Since I
>was not FULLY informed as to the details of The Master Plan, I simply
>kept placing my work on the Bath server and elsewheres, assuming (very
>wrongly, which is why I am apologizing to him) that John could/would
>look at my distributions if he wondered what I was doing. The Linux
>Csound community didn't seem to mind, I received no horror stories of
>incompatibilities, unless they had to do with the namespace pollution
>introduced by the canonical sources.
>
> And so: I will make every attempt to provide a base-line version of
>Linux Csound, one which in no way differs from the canonical sources, if
>that is what is desired. It will be the last time I do so, for I am far
>more interested in advancing the capabilities of Csound for Linux. I
>feel that is my original obligation, and it is obviously time for me to
>step aside and let someone else provide the plain-vanilla version.
>
> John, I'm sorry for causing you distress over all of this, it was
>certainly not intended, and it is emphatically not a personal issue. I
>will do anything I can to ensure that the version going out with RCB's
>book will be to your liking. I am engaged in a complete re-write of my
>chapter and I will spell out CLEARLY that there are multiple versions
>available, just as they are available for other platforms (viz the
>numerous versions for Windows). If you like, I will also specify that
>versions I supply are developmental and that the Bath server can supply
>the stable plain-vanilla package.
>
> I make no apology for the wonderful efforts of the Linux Csound
>developers group. To do so would insult the work of a great group of
>programmers who have, as has jpff, dedicated so much of their time and
>energies towards providing the best possible version of Csound currently
>available for their chosen OS.
>
> I am also not very interested in discussing this further, with anyone.
>Once accord is reached on The Master Plan for the Csound Book it seems
>to me that there will be no need for my involvement. If John and Richard
>are happy with whatever version is eventually provided then I can more
>quickly return to my preferred activities (as can we all). Polemics is
>not one of those.
>
>Thank you,
>
>== Dave Phillips
>
> http://www.bright.net/~dlphilp/index.html
> http://www.bright.net/~dlphilp/linux_soundapps.html
==================
Dr. Richard Boulanger
Professor - Music Synthesis Department
Berklee College of Music
1140 Boylston Street - Boston, MA 02215-3693
Office Phone: (617) 747-2485 Office Fax: (617) 536-2257
==========================================
Email: radiobaton@earthlink.net
URL: http://www.fortunecity.com/tinpan/underworld/836/
=================================================
Received: from stork.maths.bath.ac.uk by omphalos.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa11908;
6 Nov 98 17:03 GMT
Received: from pat.bath.ac.uk by stork.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa00329;
6 Nov 98 17:03 GMT
Received: (qmail 25178 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 17:03:31 -0000
Received: from hermes.ex.ac.uk (HELO exeter.ac.uk) (144.173.6.14)
by pat.bath.ac.uk with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 17:03:31 -0000
Received: from noether [144.173.8.10] by hermes via SMTP (QAA02319); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 16:56:41 GMT
Received: from exeter.ac.uk by maths.ex.ac.uk; Fri, 6 Nov 1998 16:56:28 GMT
Received: from root@pinstripe.richmond.edu [141.166.97.13] by hermes via ESMTP (QAA08395); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 16:56:21 GMT
Received: from jharvey4.richmond.edu (ur058025.richmond.edu [141.166.58.25])
by pinstripe.richmond.edu (8.8.5/8.8.5) with SMTP id LAA15327
for ; Fri, 6 Nov 1998 11:56:09 -0500 (EST)
Message-Id: <3.0.5.32.19981106115449.007c1630@facstaff.richmond.edu>
X-Sender: jharvey4@facstaff.richmond.edu
X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Light Version 3.0.5 (32)
Date: Fri, 06 Nov 1998 11:54:49 -0500
To: csound@maths.ex.ac.uk
From: John Harvey
Subject: Command line for WinSound 3.49? -p flag?
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Sender: owner-csound-outgoing@maths.ex.ac.uk
Precedence: bulk
Hello everyone,
I am familiar with Csound on the Mac but am new to the Win95 side of
things. Currently, I am running WinSound 3.49 on a 425 Mhz Compaq, and,
belive it or not, am having trouble getting acceptable real time output.
(I figure a 425 Mhz machine should have enough power.) I would like to
adjust the number of buffers I am using via the -p flag, but there seems to
be no way to directly send a command line to csound using the WinSound 3.49
interface. Also the -p flag is not among the flags given when Csound 3.49
generates its flag list; although, it is listed in the documentation.
(BTW, the -b and -B flags are accessable via the dialouges.)
Thanks,
John
=======================
John Harvey
Multimedia Specialist
University of Richmond
(804) 287-6011
mailto:jharvey4@richmond.edu
Received: from stork.maths.bath.ac.uk by omphalos.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa11980;
6 Nov 98 17:40 GMT
Received: from pat.bath.ac.uk by stork.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa04108;
6 Nov 98 17:40 GMT
Received: (qmail 28756 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 17:40:21 -0000
Received: from terminus.ayched.com (205.147.7.170)
by pat.bath.ac.uk with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 17:40:21 -0000
Received: from terminus.ayched.com (localhost [127.0.0.1])
by terminus.ayched.com (8.8.7/8.8.7) with ESMTP id JAA28096;
Fri, 6 Nov 1998 09:36:13 -0800
Message-Id: <199811061736.JAA28096@terminus.ayched.com>
X-Mailer: exmh version 2.0.2
To: jpff@maths.bath.ac.uk
cc: csound@maths.ex.ac.uk
Subject: Re: Version 3.491
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 05 Nov 1998 13:20:55 GMT."
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Date: Fri, 06 Nov 1998 09:36:12 -0800
From: Ed Hall
It looks like my Alpha patches made it into this version as well. Great!
One important note: there is a wrapper script for GCC that needs to be used
on Alpha that maps "long" variables into "int" (by far the biggest issue for
an Alpha port) and "%ld" formats into "%d". I'll supply it in a private
message. (This script is based on GCC and GNU BASH and SED, so it's entirely
possible that it will work on DEC Unix or Alpha NT after appropriate tools are
installed.)
Also, I'll be happy to supply Alpha Linux binaries (for glibc-based systems
like RedHat 5.x) to anyone who needs them--based on either your or the Linux
group's sources. These are current at the moment, but I can't guarantee that
I'll be able to make new binaries for each release.
-Ed
Received: from stork.maths.bath.ac.uk by omphalos.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa11991;
6 Nov 98 17:46 GMT
Received: from mercury.bath.ac.uk by stork.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa04725;
6 Nov 98 17:46 GMT
Received: (qmail 16332 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 17:46:29 -0000
Received: from hermes.ex.ac.uk (HELO exeter.ac.uk) (144.173.6.14)
by mercury.bath.ac.uk with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 17:46:29 -0000
Received: from noether [144.173.8.10] by hermes via SMTP (RAA12424); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 17:40:38 GMT
Received: from exeter.ac.uk by maths.ex.ac.uk; Fri, 6 Nov 1998 17:40:26 GMT
Received: from terminus.ayched.com [205.147.7.170] by hermes via ESMTP (RAA19132); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 17:40:24 GMT
Received: from terminus.ayched.com (localhost [127.0.0.1])
by terminus.ayched.com (8.8.7/8.8.7) with ESMTP id JAA28096;
Fri, 6 Nov 1998 09:36:13 -0800
Message-Id: <199811061736.JAA28096@terminus.ayched.com>
X-Mailer: exmh version 2.0.2
To: jpff@maths.bath.ac.uk
cc: csound@maths.ex.ac.uk
Subject: Re: Version 3.491
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Thu, 05 Nov 1998 13:20:55 GMT."
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Date: Fri, 06 Nov 1998 09:36:12 -0800
From: Ed Hall
Sender: owner-csound-outgoing@maths.ex.ac.uk
Precedence: bulk
It looks like my Alpha patches made it into this version as well. Great!
One important note: there is a wrapper script for GCC that needs to be used
on Alpha that maps "long" variables into "int" (by far the biggest issue for
an Alpha port) and "%ld" formats into "%d". I'll supply it in a private
message. (This script is based on GCC and GNU BASH and SED, so it's entirely
possible that it will work on DEC Unix or Alpha NT after appropriate tools are
installed.)
Also, I'll be happy to supply Alpha Linux binaries (for glibc-based systems
like RedHat 5.x) to anyone who needs them--based on either your or the Linux
group's sources. These are current at the moment, but I can't guarantee that
I'll be able to make new binaries for each release.
-Ed
Received: from stork.maths.bath.ac.uk by omphalos.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa12374;
6 Nov 98 22:00 GMT
Received: from mercury.bath.ac.uk by stork.maths.Bath.AC.UK id aa08513;
6 Nov 98 22:00 GMT
Received: (qmail 6459 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 21:59:59 -0000
Received: from hermes.ex.ac.uk (HELO exeter.ac.uk) (144.173.6.14)
by mercury.bath.ac.uk with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 21:59:59 -0000
Received: from noether [144.173.8.10] by hermes via SMTP (VAA20643); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 21:57:02 GMT
Received: from exeter.ac.uk by maths.ex.ac.uk; Fri, 6 Nov 1998 21:56:51 GMT
Received: from tomei.algonet.se [194.213.74.114] by hermes via SMTP (VAA24353); Fri, 6 Nov 1998 21:56:50 GMT
Received: (qmail 1777 invoked from network); 6 Nov 1998 22:56:52 +0100
Received: from du122-27.ppp.algonet.se (HELO algonet.se) (195.100.27.122)
by tomei.algonet.se with SMTP; 6 Nov 1998 22:56:52 +0100
From: Anders Andersson
Reply-To: pipe@algonet.se
To: CSound list
Date: Fri, 06 Nov 1998 20:46:22 +0100
Message-ID:
In-Reply-To:
X-Mailer: YAM 1.3.5 [020] - Amiga Mailer by Marcel Beck
Organization: Nature
Subject: LFO opcode
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Sender: owner-csound-outgoing@maths.ex.ac.uk
Precedence: bulk
>instr 1
>kp lfo 10, 5, 4
>ar oscil p4, p5+kp, 1
> out ar
>endin
Can anyone tell me what the difference is between the
'lfo' opcode and the (i assume) oldest and most usefull
of them all: 'oscil'?
To me, they seem to perform the exactly same thing,
except for 'oscil' being much more flexible.
.--- -- - -
| Anders "Pipe/Nature" Andersson, pipe@algonet.se
:
|